The historic government shutdown is over. The fight over health care is just starting.
“This is the beginning of the next round,” Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., told MSNBC Wednesday.
And if the government funding battle was bad, the brawl over health care could be even worse.
In exchange for their support of the funding package, eight Senate Democrats received a commitment from Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., that he will hold, by mid-December, a vote on a bill of the Democrats’ choosing to extend the expiring Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, subsidies.
What that bill will consist of is anyone’s guess. But if Democrats want any chance of passing the legislation, they will need help from at least 13 Republicans to break the 60-vote filibuster threshold.
Lawmakers in both parties have expressed an openness to conversations about the subsidies. But actually extending them won’t be so easy.
At its core, a successful legislative product will require a balancing act. To get enough Republicans on board, Democrats will likely have to offer significant changes to the subsidies. But cut back on the subsidies too much, and Democrats stand to lose votes from their own ranks.
Putting forward a bipartisan bill that doesn’t earn the unanimous support of Democrats just means more GOP votes would be needed to pass it. And actually passing a bill like that risks Democrats losing their one advantage in this fight: the political argument.
Republicans have long campaigned on repealing and replacing Obamacare. And when they’ve tried to follow through on those aspirations, voters have punished their party at the ballot box.
Hyde is already part of the federal law. They should go read it.”
House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass.
So if Democrats were to actually achieve some bipartisan solution to the expiring-subsidy problem, they might end up owning the Obamacare premium increases while also blunting one of their sharpest political tools against the GOP.
The more likely scenario, however, is that lawmakers fail to find any real resolution.
Republicans are demanding major reforms to the subsidies — like income restrictions, reductions to the subsidies and minimum payments from low-income recipients to ensure that enrollees know they are getting health care. Democrats mostly just want a clean extension.
One of the trickiest issues could be a familiar fault line: abortion.
Since its passage in 2010, the Affordable Care Act has included language mirroring the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federal funds from being used for abortions except in the case of rape, incest or when the life of the mother is at risk.
Republicans want to go further. They want to add Hyde Amendment language to any subsidy extension.
Twelve states currently have laws mandating that all fully insured plans include coverage for abortion, according to KFF. Additionally, 13 states and Washington, D.C., do not have laws requiring or prohibiting abortion coverage for marketplace plans.
Republicans — including Thune — want to make those restrictions stricter.
Thune told reporters last week that a one-year extension of the subsidies without Hyde Amendment protections “doesn’t even get close.” (Democrats offered a one-year extension of the current policy as a gambit to reopen the government.)
Of course, it’s not just Thune who’s raising the abortion provisions as a problem. Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., identified the lack of abortion restrictions as a core problem.
“The fact that we will not fund abortions with this money is gonna be a real issue,” Rounds said. “And I think that they’re gonna say that they disagree, that they’re funding it, and we’re gonna tell them we basically think that you’re just comingling funds.”









